4 research outputs found

    Oscillating Dispersed-Phase Co-Flow Microfluidic Droplet Generation: Effects on Jet Length and Droplet Size

    Get PDF
    Droplet-based microfluidics have emerged as versatile platforms offering unique advantages in biology and chemistry. Although there is adequate control on size and monodispersity, most conventional microfluidic techniques cannot generate more than one droplet size at a time in a continuous and high-throughput manner. Moreover, the widely used co-flow microfluidic droplet generation technique is bottlenecked with droplet polydispersity at high throughputs due to the transition from a more-stable dripping regime to an instable jetting regime at high d-phase flow rates. We applied nozzle oscillatory motion to generate an axial shear gradient as well as inducing an additional transverse drag force. We hypothesized that the combined effects of axial and transverse drags can be used for overcoming the aforementioned limitations of co-flow systems. Nozzle oscillation effect was studied in both dripping and jetting regimes to generate repeatable patterns of multi-size monodisperse droplets and jet length reduction in different biphasic systems, respectively

    Micro/Nanofluidic Devices for Single Cell Analysis

    Get PDF

    Lab-on-a-Chip Fabrication and Application

    Get PDF
    The necessity of on-site, fast, sensitive, and cheap complex laboratory analysis, associated with the advances in the microfabrication technologies and the microfluidics, made it possible for the creation of the innovative device lab-on-a-chip (LOC), by which we would be able to scale a single or multiple laboratory processes down to a chip format. The present book is dedicated to the LOC devices from two points of view: LOC fabrication and LOC application

    Electrical cell manipulation in microfluidic systems

    Get PDF
    This dissertation reports on the development of devices and concepts for electrical and microfluidic cell manipulation. In the present context, the term cell manipulation stands for both cell handling and cell modification. The combination of microfluidic channels with micropatterned electrodes allows for the definition of highly localised chemical and electrical environments with spatial resolution comparable to the size of a cell. The devices fabricated in the frame of this thesis employ dielectrophoretic particle handling schemes such as deflection and trapping in pressure-controlled laminar flows to bring cells to – or immobilise them at – locations where cell altering electric fields or chemicals are present. The two concepts of dielectrophoretic cell dipping and cell immersion are introduced and experimentally shown for erythrocytes dipped into Rhodamine in flow, and for individually immobilised Jurkat cells immersed by Trypan Blue. Also, in-situ membrane breakdown in high intensity AC electric fields is optically assessed by efflux of haemoglobin (haemolysis) and by influx of nucleic stains or fluorescence-enhancing ions. The most advanced experiments are on-chip medium exchange followed immediately by electropermeablisation or electrodeformation. The majority of assays presented in this thesis are carried out in microfabricated glass-polymer-glass chips featuring top-bottom electrodes. The devices are fluidically controlled by external gas pressure bridging circuits. Experimental evidence of the unmatched precision of pressure bridging is given in the case of micrometric xy positioning of cells at the intersection of two perpendicular microfluidic channels. Further shown in this document are two methods of optical in-situ temperature measurements, important for bioinstrument characterisation. The two concepts of thermoquenching of a fluorescent dye and the original thermoprecipitation of "smart polymers" are used. The last part of this work deals with the innovative, conceptual engineering tool Liquid Electrode. The general concept and its advantages over solid-state electrodes are given, followed by numerical particle tracking in the case of the novel lateral nDEP particle deflection. The chapter on liquid electrodes concludes with preliminary experimental results of buffer swapping of cells in flow and of AC electropermeabilisation of erythrocytes at frequencies far below the cut-off frequency of corresponding solid-state microelectrodes
    corecore